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B C s Indigenous tourism operators betting on local markets
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These eye-opening field trips can spark kids curiosity
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A year after the pandemic shut down global travel, Canada’s borders remain restricted to the world, and closed to the U.S. by land. At the start of 2021, America’s northern neighbor further implemented draconian entry requirements for citizens and visitors in an attempt to curb the entry of Covid variants.
Further stunting recovery is Canada’s recent vaccine distribution lag. While fellow G7 nations are advancing on that front, notably the United States its primary tourism competitor only three out of 100 Canadians had received one dose as of two weeks ago, compared to approximately 14 in the U.S. and 21 in the UK. The delay has even prompted political rivals to lash out at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
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At first glance, the St. Eugene Golf Resort and Casino looks like any other carefully renovated historic property, but its history is unlike any other hotel in the world.
From 1912 to 1970, the St. Eugene Mission near Cranbrook, B.C. was a residential school for indigenous children. The facility was the first comprehensive Indian Industrial and Residential school to be built in the Canadian West, one of an eventual 130 residential schools operating in Canada between 1831 and 1996. St. Eugene was built to accommodate 126 students, but as many as 200 students lived there during the 1950s and ’60s. In all, about 5,000 children from British Columbia and Alberta came through the school. Some did not survive the mistreatment, meted out here and in other residential schools.
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